Ferguson shooting suspect denied lower bond

CLAYTON (AP) - A Missouri judge on Tuesday refused to reduce the bond of a 20-year-old man accused of shooting and wounding two police officers during a Ferguson protest, despite an attorney's insistence that the man was beaten by police into wrongly confessing.

Jeffrey Williams, shackled at the wrists and ankles, said nothing during a 10-minute hearing in which his attorney, Jerryl Christmas, failed to sway a St. Louis County judge to cut Williams' $300,000 cash bond to one that would require him to pay only $10,000.

Christmas argued that the jobless Williams has no history of violence, has a girlfriend who is eight months pregnant and deserved a bond akin to cases where the shooting victims survive. He suggested that a $300,000 bond was more traditional in homicide cases.

But prosecutor Bart Calhoun countered that Williams - charged with felony assault, armed criminal action and a weapons offense - poses a public risk if freed. Calhoun said the gunfire early March 12 was "a drive-by shooting that put a great number of citizens at risk."

The shooting occurred during a protest sparked by the resignation of Ferguson's police chief.

Both officers, who are expected to recover, were monitoring protests outside the city's police station, which has been a nexus of unrest since a white Ferguson officer fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was black and unarmed, last summer.

Calhoun noted that when Williams was arrested for the shooting, he was being sought on a warrant alleging he violated probation terms related to his use of a stolen credit card.

"Clearly, I don't think the current bond is unreasonable," the prosecutor told the judge.

Prosecutors allege that Williams told investigators he fired a gun but was aiming at someone else. Christmas said his client has recanted that story, told him he never shot a weapon that day and only confessed after being roughed up by police.

On Tuesday, Calhoun told the judge "the evidence in this case is overwhelming," adding that Williams admitted being the gunman "to several people after his arrest."

"He said he never fired a weapon. He didn't have a weapon," Christmas told reporters after the hearing. He said police beat the alleged confession out of Williams, and "I just don't believe that any statements were made voluntarily."

St. Louis County police spokesman Brian Schellman has called Christmas' assertions "completely false." Schellman said Williams was seen by a nurse when he was booked into the county jail - standard procedure for all incoming inmates - who deemed him "fit for confinement."

Ferguson has been a national focal point since Brown was killed Aug. 9 by then-police officer Darren Wilson. A grand jury declined to indict Wilson in November, and Wilson was cleared of civil rights charges by a U.S. Justice Department report released March 4.

A separate DOJ report found widespread racial bias in the city's policing and its municipal court system.

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